Wallabies vs Lions will be a special encounter
By David Lord, 21 Jun 2012 David Lord is a Roar Expert
- Tagged:
- Rugby Union, The British and Irish Lions, wallabies
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It’s a year and a day to the kick off between the Wallabies and the British and Irish Lions at Suncorp in the first of three Tests.
The last time these two teams met in 2001 was an historic series for the men-in-gold coached by Rod Macqueen, and skippered by John Eales, to win 2-1 for the first and only time.
That was indeed a golden era of Wallaby rugby, with those two giants of the game at the helm, capturing the Rugby World Cup in 1999, the Bledisloe Cup from 1998 to 2001, the Tri-Nations in 2000 and 2001, with the icing on the cake, conquering the Lions.
The max.
The current Wallabies won’t be taking on the Lions in 366 days time with that same illustrious track record.
But the Lions won’t be boasting impressive form, either, judging by Wales, England, and Ireland losing all six internationals to the Wallabies, Boks, and All Blacks respectively in the last fortnight.
But that only adds to the aura.
The British and Irish Lions teams have an aura of their own, and the mere fact they only tour Australia every 12 years puts them in a very special category as a combined side from England, Ireland, Scotland, and Wales.
It doesn’t happen in any other international sport.
To make it even more special, the Lions attract fanatical support from the Home Unions, expect a sea of red from them numbering in the many thousands.
Their colour clash with the gold-decked Wallaby supporters will be a spectacular sight, and important side issue.
It’s amazing how Lions officianardos have viewed Australian rugby.
Over the years, the Lions only played the Wallabies as the “warm-up” for the “real internationals” against the All Blacks, believing the Wallabies weren’t strong enough to tour alone.
That was the case in the Lions tours of 1904, 1930, 1950, 1959, and 1966 where in total the Wallabies met the tourists 10 times for just one win.
On the same tours, the All Blacks played 17 and won 14 with a draw.
Which rather proved the point, the Wallabies weren’t strong enough.
That thinking changed in 1989 and the Wallabies immediately proved their worth by comfortably winning the first Test at the SFS by 30-12. The Lions squared the series at Ballymore with a hard-fought 19-12 win, and took the series 2-1 with a nail-biting 19-18 win at the SFS.
That was the “infamous” Test where crack Wallaby winger David Campese was unfairly pilloried for passing on his goal-line, the ball was dropped by full-back Greg Martin, Lions winger Ieuan Evans swooped and scored.
If there was an offender, it wasn’t Campese, but Martin for not being alert. Had he been so, and quick enough, he had an empty field in front of him and could have gone all the way.
The point is, the pass should have been held.
So instead of winning an exciting first exclusive Lions tour of Australia, the Wallabies were pipped at the post.
Macqueen and Eales made sure that didn’t repeat 12 years later, losing the first Test at the Gabba 29-13, but bouncing back to comprehensively win the second at Colonial in Melbourne 35-14, and clinching the series 29-23 at Stadium Australia.
Euphoric days. A dose of the same next year would do wonders for Wallaby rugby and their frustrated fans.
It will be all yours to lock away, Robbie Deans and David Pocock.
Watch the full match replay between the Wallabies and British and Irish Lions from 2001
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- Explore:
- Rugby Union, The British and Irish Lions, wallabies

June 21st 2012 @ 3:48am
kingplaymaker said | June 21st 2012 @ 3:48am | Report comment
The problem the Wallabies face is introducing any new talent in time for the series as there is little time left, with no tests before the Lions arrive next year. Any new players must be introduced this year and many may not be ready to be
June 21st 2012 @ 4:15am
The Werewolf said | June 21st 2012 @ 4:15am | Report comment
KPM the problem with blooding new guys this year is that it is too risky with the december deadline for the 2015 RWC draw based on our ranking.
So the current wallaby line up (which has just beaten the 6 nations champs) should form the basis of next years team hopefully with a couple of additions based on super xv form.
June 21st 2012 @ 3:58am
Pot Hale said | June 21st 2012 @ 3:58am | Report comment
little time left, with no tests before the Lions arrive next year?
Eh…. the 4 Nations and November internationals still count as tests, I think
June 21st 2012 @ 4:21am
kingplaymaker said | June 21st 2012 @ 4:21am | Report comment
PH yes but the four nations are must win for Deans and innovation difficult in the november internationals for the reason Werewolf gives. Also, man young players need more Super rugby before being blooded.
June 21st 2012 @ 5:16am
David Lord said | June 21st 2012 @ 5:16am | Report comment
Fellas, there’s no cause for panic. After the Test against Wales on Saturday, there are three Tests against the ABs, and two each against the Boks and Pumas through August to October, and three, possibly four, at the end of the year. All up that’s 10-11 Tests still to come in 2012, ample time to blood new players in preparation for the Lions who will far less preparation than that.
June 21st 2012 @ 5:26am
Pot Hale said | June 21st 2012 @ 5:26am | Report comment
In other words:
“Eh…. the 4 Nations and November internationals still count as tests, I think”
June 21st 2012 @ 6:42pm
the breakdown said | June 21st 2012 @ 6:42pm | Report comment
I don’t think we’ll be blooding any new players in the rugby championship which we ant to win!
Possibly the november tour.
June 21st 2012 @ 5:38am
Skills & Techniques said | June 21st 2012 @ 5:38am | Report comment
I’ve just had a high tibial osteotomy and I want to thanks you guys for posting all night because I can’t sleep.
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June 21st 2012 @ 6:25am
Pot Hale said | June 21st 2012 @ 6:25am | Report comment
Well stop using your iPhone and have a few beers instead for a proper knees up.
June 21st 2012 @ 6:58am
Sherry said | June 21st 2012 @ 6:58am | Report comment
DAVID – re that pass not being Campo’s fault. Campo blamed himself for the loss. After the game, he was so mad at himself he hopped into his Beemer, burnt away and got himself a speeding ticket on the PH. Unrepentent, he told the speed cop he’d really been clicking them off a mile or two back. Martin was surprised by the pass because when you played with Campo you never knew what he was going to do.
June 21st 2012 @ 7:11am
David Lord said | June 21st 2012 @ 7:11am | Report comment
That’s the whole point Sherry. Playing anywhere near Campo, or Mark Ella during his illustrious career, expect the unexpected and reap the rewards. Pretty basic rugby.
June 23rd 2012 @ 2:49am
jeznez said | June 23rd 2012 @ 2:49am | Report comment
It is worse than that David – Marto called for it.
June 23rd 2012 @ 2:59am
jeznez said | June 23rd 2012 @ 2:59am | Report comment
Apologies. Just watched the replay for the first time ever – Marto did call for it but that was a shocking pass going behind him. That is the very first time I have seen the footage apart from seeing it live sitting behind those sticks.
June 21st 2012 @ 7:21am
Darwin Stubbie said | June 21st 2012 @ 7:21am | Report comment
Seriously we’re already talking about a tour just over a year away ? This is about the 3rd or 4th piece on the lions …. SR hardly starts and the talk is all about the Wallabies etc … Now it seems it’s let’s gloss over this weekend and the new 4N tournament plus EoY tours and talk up the lions … Given our obvious focus on international rugby over everything else – surely a better topic to probe would be what’s the likely effect of the June internationals on the remainder of SR … Have majority of fans now moved on – from this and all the other articles it seems so
June 21st 2012 @ 7:44am
CraigB said | June 21st 2012 @ 7:44am | Report comment
No one makes you read or st on the. DS. If you’re not interested do us all a favour and steer clear
June 21st 2012 @ 9:50am
Jono said | June 21st 2012 @ 9:50am | Report comment
Darwin, I’m with you mate. There are far more pressing issues at the moment in Rugby, i.e. Wallaby depth, coaching issues, competitiveness that would be better served with journalistic resources.
Whatsmore the article has no substance, it just seems to be a wafty historical summary. Wouldn’t be out of place as a wikipedia article. At least provide some kind of ciritcal view point about who will win or something like that.
Also, I didn’t know we had locked in Pocock for captain next year.
June 21st 2012 @ 7:40am
Uncle Argyle said | June 21st 2012 @ 7:40am | Report comment
Lordy,
off topic, do you re-call who the NSW Country player was who decked Cowboy Shaw Circa 1982/83?
June 21st 2012 @ 10:13am
David Lord said | June 21st 2012 @ 10:13am | Report comment
Didn’t see the game Uncle, but it created quite a stir at the time. It was generally Cowboy who did all the whacking. Have a feeling it was the big bloke Ollie Hall, but I’m checking it out.
June 21st 2012 @ 10:58am
Uncle Argyle said | June 21st 2012 @ 10:58am | Report comment
Appreciated, it has just come up with a Kiwi mate and he reckons it never happened.
June 21st 2012 @ 6:50pm
chuck said | June 21st 2012 @ 6:50pm | Report comment
your kiwi mates right Bledisloe cup 1980 cow boy Broke Ian Williams lock for the wallabies jaw
June 22nd 2012 @ 6:19am
Uncle Argyle said | June 22nd 2012 @ 6:19am | Report comment
Chuck,
I assume you can read English. My question was “do you re-call who the NSW Country player was who decked Cowboy Shaw Circa 1982/83?” – how that relates to a Bledisloe in 1980 I will never know?
I do re-call that game as well and Ian Williams, the former Australian winger was not playing in that match. Steve Williams the former St Josephs & Drummoyne second rower was and did have has jaw broken by Mark Shaw.
Just the facts Chuck, just the facts…
June 21st 2012 @ 9:27pm
Mitch in Valencia said | June 21st 2012 @ 9:27pm | Report comment
Sounds like something Ollie would do. Being a mate of my old man’s, I’ve had the pleasure to meet the 8ft adventure story on two legs and hear many stories over the years. My fav is being a stuntman man on Mad Max Thunderdome after being Tina Turner’s bodyguard!
June 21st 2012 @ 10:19am
Worlds Biggest said | June 21st 2012 @ 10:19am | Report comment
I’ve been fortunate enought to attend 5 Lions test matches and they’re incredible events. I’ll never forget the Campo pass, I was sitting at that end of the ground. I was only a teenager however was distraught we lost, in fact there may have been tears. Obviously we made amends in 2001 which was just a brilliant series. The 3rd game decider was epic.
June 23rd 2012 @ 2:53am
jeznez said | June 23rd 2012 @ 2:53am | Report comment
WB, I was sixteen and sitting behind those sticks as well – no tears on this side. That remains the only Lions game I’ve seen live. Think I will need to rectify that next year.
June 21st 2012 @ 1:01pm
Johnno said | June 21st 2012 @ 1:01pm | Report comment
Biggest wallaby problem is depth.
We have 25 capable players but after that, the talent gets thin.
Where as the lions have so much more depth but there 25 is neck and neck with our wallabies.
June 21st 2012 @ 2:07pm
Albo said | June 21st 2012 @ 2:07pm | Report comment
Sorry David. I am a massive Campo fan but fault was all his.
The pass was horrible. It was the wrong option. He should have dummied and ran himself. At the point in which the ball left his hands Evans was already on his way to completely cover Martin (Evans’ back was completely turned on Campese by then).
Even if Martin had caught it he would have been tackled straight away. Campo was right to blame himself.
June 21st 2012 @ 2:31pm
Johnno said | June 21st 2012 @ 2:31pm | Report comment
watch the footage closely a few observations.
It should of been a penalty to Australia, Marto was pushed out of the way without the ball as he was going to ground it in goal. Really should of been a penalty to the wallabies.
June 21st 2012 @ 2:42pm
rl said | June 21st 2012 @ 2:42pm | Report comment
Sorry David, but Albo is all over it. Shocker of a pass by Campo. Marto knew the play was on (they exchanged a look as they looped), and was clearly ready for something but the pass went behind him. And as Albo says, the defender (Evans) was alert to it. Even in the unlikely event Evans missed the tackle on Marto, there is no way he’d then have gone the whole way unchallenged – plenty of players in Red trailing across from the scrum.
Even if you don’ think it was a bone-headed play, it was at the very least very poor execution by Campo. Hard to lay the blame at Marto’s feet.
June 21st 2012 @ 2:53pm
Albo said | June 21st 2012 @ 2:53pm | Report comment
Appreciated RL. Your last statement is an important one. There was definitely something on there. It was just executed very poorly. You see the same thing when you run two on one practice drills with young teams.
The thing for me is that while everyone talks about how unpredictable he was, it’s actually the most predictable thing Campo ever did. You rarely see a pass as telegraphed.